120 Iowa 132 | Iowa | 1903
On the 28d day of May, 1900, the defendant, by letter, authorized one P. A. Edington to list lands belonging to him in O’Brien county for sale. The
The day after the sale was made, on the 15th of June, Edington wrote the defendant, advising him thereof, and stating to him the exact and true terms agreed upon,
■ With a copy of the memorandum of sale and the several letters written to him by Edington, to which we have referred, before him, and without having interposed a single objection to the terms of the sale, the defendant finally answered the numerous appeals of Edington for a ratification of his acts in this last letter, and at the same time he answered the suit brought against him by the plaintiff by deliberately promising to send on a contract to close the matter. It will not do to say that he only agreed to send on such a contract as he might be pleased to make. He does not say any such thing, nor can it be implied from the language of his letter. On the other hand, when it is construed in connection with the contemporaneous correspondence, it will admit of no such interpretation. If the defendant had not intended to ratify the sale upon the precise terms agreed upon by the plaintiff and Edington, he would not have written as he did. Having ratified the sale, it is, of course fundamental that it is irrevocable.
We think the judgment of the district court right, and it is AEEIRMED.